SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 6
Descargar para leer sin conexión
The Brand University™ -- How to make a sustainable, successful brand.

Executive Summary:

The world of branding has, over a very condensed period of time, undergone a virtual and very real
revolution as far as both the consumer and the employee are concerned. The challenge that companies
are now facing is how to adapt effectively and efficiently to several convergent paradigm shifts. This white
paper reviews some of the major changes and raises questions about the implications for today‘s leaders.
This paper‘s position is that, more than ever before, companies need to evolve into Learning
              1
Organizations and that instituting a company-wide Brand University™ can offer a compelling way to
accompany such a change.

Building a successful brand is a more complex task

In today‘s marketplace and, certainly, going forward, creating a sustainably successful brand has become
a different and more complex task than in, even, the near past. The main factors that have brought about
this shift are threefold: (1) the plethora of brands with the onslaught of new product launches; (2) the
digital world (internet and mobility) with its ability to diffuse the power of traditional marketing and
distribution; and (3) the latent lack of trust between the consumer and the brand, layered in with the lack
of trust between employee and employer.

The consumer – certainly impacted by the economic pressures -- has pulled back from buying brands
blindly. The luxury market, for example, has been distinctly hit, as there has been more scrutiny of the
intrinsic value in the upscale prices. As Pam Danziger of Unity Marketing said in their 2009 study on the
luxury market, ―[a]ffluent consumers are redefining, reassessing and re-evaluating their lives and their
lifestyles. This is happening across the culture, not just among a small segment of the affluent market
and it will mean major shifts to how luxury brands can market their goods in the new economy.‖2

The paradigm shifts are on many levels

Yet, the phenomenon of questioning the value of brands goes much further. In the current environment,
with manifold uncertainties produced by the lingering threat of terrorism, global warming and economic
recession, the consumer has been re-evaluating his/her relationship with money and the purchase
decision in search of greater meaning. In order to rise above the strictly functional performance of a
given product, the brand will need to demonstrate its ―added value‖, whereby the consumer finds
significance in -- and identifies with – the brand‘s values. And a large part of the challenge is in being
able to communicate that value effectively and fluidly.

Brands have to fight through the clutter of crowded, confusing and disparate communication channels to
reach an audience that no longer takes as the gospel the marketing messages. Broad and dislocated
access to information – especially on price, performance and location – has empowered the consumer.
With the so-called ―left brain3‖ messaging driven to its logical extreme, the new world order belongs
increasingly to the ―right brain‖ where image, emotion and experience are privileged – if only
unconsciously -- by the consumer in their purchase decision. In this context, companies need to evaluate
whether their employees are tapping into their more creative and conceptual side. In his book, ―A Whole
            4
New Mind, ‖ Dan Pink forcefully speaks to the value of a balanced mind, combining the rational and
analytical components with the more imaginative, artistic sides of the brain. And such is the need inside

1
  A learning organization is the term given to a company that facilitates the learning of its members and continuously transforms
itself. Pedler, M., Burgogyne, J. and Boydell, T. 1997. The Learning Company: A strategy for sustainable development. 2nd Ed.
London; McGraw-Hill.
2
  Unity Marketing, run by Pamela Danziger, is a boutique market research firm specializing in consumer insights for marketers and
retailers http://www.unitymarketingonline.com/cms_luxury/luxury/pr_main/After_Recession_5-27-09.php
3
  The idea of left and right sides of the brain is a misnomer as it is far too reductive. For purposes of this paper, we use t he ―left
brain‖ term to be associated with rational, analytical thought, while the ―right brain‖ is associated with abstract, creative thought.
4
  Daniel Pink, ―A Whole New Mind: Moving from the Information Age to the Conceptual Age,‖ (NY, NY: Penguin, 2005).



The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet                                                                                          Page 1
the new organization, which could be better described as a living organism, capable of learning, growing
and adapting to the new environment and demands of the marketplace. As Peter Senge said, ―[i]n the
long run, the only sustainable source of competitive advantage is [the] organization‘s ability to learn faster
than its competition.‖5

In search of congruency

If product excellence and innovation remain the sine qua non of leading brands, traditional Kotler-like
marketing no longer carries the same weight in creating a successful brand. One could even argue that
marketing, as we know it, must take a step back to re-allocate resources toward building the business the
―old fashioned way,‖ that is to say via relationship and network building, aided by the burgeoning new
technologies. As written by Minter Dial on TheMyndset.com:

          “The emphasis so often remains on the product, its performance, packaging, pricing and publicity
          — all part of a hardcore left brain (i.e. super rational) affair, with no room for fun or out of the box
          thinking. While marketing teams must continue to plot their 4 p’s, the real action is in words (i.e.
          accompanied by the authentic acts) that begin with an e: engagement, emotion, exchange,
          experience & essence. These 5 e’s come on top of the 4 p’s, not in replacement thereof.”




If social media has become so powerful, it is because it is ―social‖ before it is media. The new business
environment puts a greater emphasis on the quality of the relationship and other intangibles such as
humor, education and the element of surprise. A successful brand, therefore, needs to create what Carl
                                6
Rogers described as congruency as part of a larger value system. In a company setting, this value
system requires time to develop and transmit and, by extension, requires a tremendous effort of

5
  Peter M. Senge, ―The Fifth Discipline, The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization.‖ (NY, NY: Doubleday, 2000). The
quotation was paraphrased by Senge from a statement made by Arie de Geus, Head of Planning of Royal Dutch/Shell, p8.
6
  As described by Carl Rogers (in On Becoming a Person: A Therapist's View of Psychotherapy. London: Constable, 1961),
congruency for the individual can be applied to the brand, whereby a fully congruent brand realizes its potential without
compromising a positive experience. The brand – and the individuals within – can remain authentic and genuine in pursuit of the
brand‘s objectives.



The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet                                                                                    Page 2
coherency. Consequently, brands need to revisit their strategies and, importantly, need to rethink how to
create an appropriate company-wide culture, with the adapted processes and tools.

The employer brand

At the centre of the equation is the human being, the employee, breathing life into the product experience
every living day (and not just the working days). Brands interact with the customer in many inanimate
one-way and interruptive manners, through advertising, packaging and merchandising. Such mechanisms
will undoubtedly remain in place, albeit evolving with the new technologies. However, the strength of a
brand – and its ability to retain a sustainable loyalty – will lie in the development of a dynamic and
evolutionary relationship. Brands that will succeed in the future, therefore, will need to strengthen the
emotional link – and this link passes most credibly via personal relationship building, networking and
interaction. The key actor then becomes the employee. As Tony Hsieh, CEO of Zappos.com, has said,
―every employee is the brand‖.

And the main challenge in this context is being able to attract, select, train and empower the employee
population to own, transport and transpose those values onto the end consumer experience.

The old moniker of ―keeping it simple, stupid‖ remains pertinent, but not sufficient. The new world is
radically more complex with evermore disperse, confused and crowded communication channels. A
brand has to unify all its forces in the same direction in order to compete in this cluttered world. The
strongest and most vibrant brands will be those that are meaningful and consistent, all the while being
innovative. And there is no better vehicle to pass this message than via the employee. Some brands that
have been doing an excellent job at this include Patagonia or Starbucks, while other high profile brands
have actually taken to advertising their employees as their ―product‖ (e.g. General Electric, IBM, Intel and,
recently, Toyota). Whether that employee is the salesperson, beauty advisor at the department store
stand, an educator for hairdressers, a customer service representative, telephone operator, or any junior
employee in head office in an online chat room, the challenge is in spreading the values and galvanizing
the entire organization behind the same tone of message.

Breaking down the silos

For the vast majority of companies, the notion of brand building is rudimentary and limited to the
development of product (or services) and filling of orders. Even when an enterprise is aware of the need
to move from selling a product/service to creating an unforgettable experience. there are many
hindrances to implementing a full brand experience. The ambition is oftentimes curtailed because of
budgetary restraints, a lack of know-how or internal politics where departments operate too much in silos.
And the challenge is not a simple one to overcome. At its core, the corporate culture may need to be re-
conditioned to break down those silos and to allocate the time and resources necessary around the
common uniting force: the client. And, in due recognition of the limited nature of resources, this will
frequently entail what not to do as much as what is necessary to do.

In this new environment, companies need to evolve their corporate ethos and culture toward a style of
management which favours collaboration intra- and, even, inter-company, to find ways to foster intra-
departmental sharing of values and information, to harness the expertise and history resident in the
individuals of the company via the new technologies. With the trend toward distributed workforces and the
burgeoning wave of web-enabled technologies, there are opportunities – particularly for the larger
multinational companies – to create blended (i.e. off- and online) networking and, equally important,
blended learning environments. This suggests a host of new managerial skills and processes such as:

     A review of the brand‘s strategy and an alignment of the brand‘s strategy with its deeper mission
      (assuming such has been appropriately defined).
     The ability to define a corporate identity and culture, to clarify and share its values throughout the
      organization and to live fully by those values, i.e. to hire and fire according to these values.



The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet                                                                Page 3
 The need for new measurement tools for the organization which recognize a truly collaborative
                  7
       (―web 2.0‖ ) spirit.
      A re-definition of the role of the manager as a coach or a facilitator (for example, of networks)

This raises 3 important questions:

      How to share the new brand identity – the vision – in order to get people to question outdated
       beliefs about what the company "is", and, ultimately, to change behaviours?
      How to create a [worldwide] network of trainers and/or consultants able to deliver the content and
       tools necessary to accompany such a transition?
      How to provide a sustainable, cost-effective presence in the countries to maintain the connection
       to and vibrancy of the brand‘s values?

It is our conviction that one of the key methods of building a successful brand, that will have a sustainable
future, is by creating a University for the Brand, an internally oriented organization which helps define
those values within the enterprise. More importantly, this Brand University™ communicates those values
via its partners and throughout the multiple channels and touchpoints toward the end consumer.

The Brand University™ would be, by our definition, a centre of creativity, innovation and collective
intelligence. However, we believe the notion needs to go much further toward building a spirit, an identity
and a community united around the brand. We believe that such a university must have three central
principles to help create a sustainably powerful brand.

3 principles of the Brand University

The first principle of the Brand University™ is that the company is genuinely dedicated to being client
centric. Much lip service is paid to being client focused; however, many companies trip up under the
sales pressure, overblown egos as well as a lack of means. To put the customer truly at the centre, a
company needs to have the customer‘s interests at heart. In order even to have access to those
interests, the brand necessarily must gain the trust of that customer. As coined by Alex Mangossian 8,
brands need to be less concerned with building their [internal] database and more concerned with
building their fan base, through a relationship founded on trust. With that trust comes the opportunities to
learn together, to collaborate and share invaluable data. Given the ability for consumers to circumvent or
even to twist standard corporate communications, brands must learn to get involved with the customer in
ways that are credible and, in short, more human. Customer Relationship Management (CRM) must be
converted from a mechanical one-way conversation into social relationship building.

The second principle of the Brand University™ is that the strength of the brand resides in the human
element.     Employees up and down the age scale are increasingly seeking—above just straight
compensation—greater meaning from their place of employment. It is well known that employee
satisfaction can come from learning, providing instruction for purposes increased effectiveness and a
degree of motivation. However, greater fulfilment can come from working in an ongoing learning
environment. Well beyond one-time, off-site trainings, a learning environment implies more a shared
state of mind. And, the coincidence is that companies need also to convert themselves into learning
organizations in order better to capture the history and knowledge that resides in its human bank. A
Learning Organisation is one in which the internal team is committed to a constructive and systemic
approach of sharing and learning in the pursuit of a positive economic result. Importantly, the entire
organisation must be involved and, fundamentally, the ‗corporate‘ strategy, if not culture, must involve and
encourage experimentation, learning and the ―right to err‖. As said by Pedler et al, ―[t]he Learning
Company is a vision of what might be possible. It is not brought about simply by training individuals; it can

7
 The term "Web 2.0" is commonly associated with web applications that facilitate interactive information
sharing, interoperability, user-centered design, and collaboration (such as user-generated content) on the World Wide Web.

8
 Alex Mangossian, CEO of Heritage House Publishing, Inc. Author of www.alexmangossian.com and at
www.MarketingOnlineLive.com. Taken from the Podcast "Smartest thing you can do in 2010".

The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet                                                                                    Page 4
only happen as a result of learning at the whole organization level. A Learning Company is an
                                                                                                   9
organization that facilitates the learning of all its members and continuously transforms itself.‖

The third principle, in line with the generally accepted definition of the Learning Organisation, is that the
Brand University™ must become a project-wide undertaking, not limited to the sales force or the other
branches directly in touch with the end customer. Not only does the CEO need to be the brand‘s biggest
and best spokesperson, all departments need to be aligned behind the same values and messages.

We believe that the Brand University™ concept, that seeks to propagate the brand‘s values and systems
throughout the brand and all the subsidiaries, starting with the sales branch, is the most comprehensive
and organic process, adapted to the modern challenge of multinational brands. The undertaking of a true
Brand University™ for a major brand is as yet unprecedented on an international stage. While there are
many corporate universities in existence, they tend to focus on competence acquisition or sales training.
The Brand University, as the basis of a vibrant learning organization, remains untested in the field in its
fullest measure. And for companies with a portfolio of brands to manage, the further challenge is creating
an all-encompassing company-wide sales university without compromising or effacing the differences
resident in each of the brands.

How does such a university become reality?

The very first step is critical: to establish that the company is ready and willing to evolve, with buy-in from
top management. As is so often the case, top management must lead by example. Moreover, the
allocation of resources is systematically a top-down decision belonging to the C-suite.

In order to avoid creating an empty concept, the starting point has to be operational, and close to one of
the organization's nerve centres. This will allow the creation of a community of practice10. The idea here is
not a Corporate University, more often devoted to the development or the recognition of some Happy
Few, but a real Brand University. This, by bringing together the various communities of practice, creates
relationships, bonding the different stakeholders while embracing Brand values and thus creating a sense
and pride of belonging. When it comes down to it, staff members are the first to create a positive energy
around their Brand. And they are the first to share, contagiously, their enthusiasm, their confidence, and
their pride in the products or services promoted by their Brand.

The Brand University™ is a real or virtual space in which staff can share codes, symbols, habits,
behaviour, and language, and gain from cultural, generational, or even hierarchical diversity. It is a
forum for the shared ideas, values, and especially the vision which are the bases of any "human
company". A Brand University™ will thrive if the initial impulse is accompanied by the boundless capacity
to encourage innovation, the sole guarantor of future value. Today, more than ever, innovation cannot
come solely from R&D locked away in a laboratory, or from brand management pirouetting in its
headquarters, but must instead be encouraged, sought after, supported, and recognised within all levels
of an organisation. To return to the metaphor of a living organism, the survival of the organisation
depends on a developmental intelligence and having adaptation skills built into every living cell.

From this perspective, the initial ―community of practice‖, as the starting point of the Brand University,
allows us to come back to the fundamental professions associated with the common goal of production,
whatever the industry. Organisations operate with increasingly complex structures. Multi-national
companies create matrix hierarchies, cross-departmental projects, indispensable yet potentially stultifying
rules, and seek economies of scale that can kill off good ideas before they get off the ground. In this
world of ever more complex organisations, a return to the basics and the lowest common professional
denominator is the best way to put the horse back before the cart and give a new impulse and energy to

9
    M. Pedler, J. Burgoyne & T. Boydell, The Learning Company. A Strategy for Sustainable Development, Mc Graw-Hill, 1997

10
  A ―community of practice‖ is a group of people who share an interest, concern or passion and who interact together in an effort to
build a collective intelligence and learn how to do their activity better.



The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet                                                                                      Page 5
move forward. At the granular level, individuals are faced with the fragmentation of tasks and the
emergence of often-misunderstood virtual tools (whose adoption is resisted). Combined with a fear of
change, individuals experience isolation, stress, discouragement and disorientation. In this context,
regaining confidence in "knowing what you know, doing what you do" and sharing it with others across
professional and language barriers, are a source of enrichment and empowerment. Such empowerment
gives back to employees the feeling of working together, pride in belonging, and peer recognition, all of
which help lead to a renewed hope that difficulties can be overcome by individual initiative and collective
mobilisation as well as a commitment to the values which bring them together: The Brand.

The Brand University™ should be a space in which everyone, whatever their position in the company, not
only accepts change, but become actors who create change. They can experiment with new
perspectives, open themselves up to new ideas, cut through traditional hierarchies or divisions to create
new relationships, and act and talk differently in order to try out new ideas on a neutral terrain. The goal
of the Brand University™ is to capitalise on shared knowledge and passion to find ideas that will, in the
future, contribute to the organisation of the company, and especially to test how these discoveries can be
implemented and integrated to become the new Business as Usual.


Authors: Minter Dial, President The Myndset Company & Eric Mellet, Sales and Development Training
Director




The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet                                                               Page 6

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

kotler_2010_brasil
kotler_2010_brasilkotler_2010_brasil
kotler_2010_brasilGustavo Melo
 
Business to Society Marketing - Kotler's Marketing 3.0
Business to Society Marketing - Kotler's Marketing 3.0Business to Society Marketing - Kotler's Marketing 3.0
Business to Society Marketing - Kotler's Marketing 3.0Nakul Patel
 
Summary Connective Branding
Summary Connective BrandingSummary Connective Branding
Summary Connective Brandingcvallaster
 
Marketing 3.0 presentation
Marketing 3.0 presentationMarketing 3.0 presentation
Marketing 3.0 presentationMihir Pandit
 
Corporate communication
Corporate communicationCorporate communication
Corporate communicationYmadhu Reddy
 
The Evolution of Corporate Communications
The Evolution of Corporate CommunicationsThe Evolution of Corporate Communications
The Evolution of Corporate CommunicationsKenny Ong
 
Marketing 3.0 summary 2
Marketing 3.0 summary 2Marketing 3.0 summary 2
Marketing 3.0 summary 2Greg Zerovnik
 
Londre marketingconsulting nineps
Londre marketingconsulting ninepsLondre marketingconsulting nineps
Londre marketingconsulting ninepsMiracleMaeCaparas
 
The 18 ps of inbound marketing
The 18 ps of inbound marketingThe 18 ps of inbound marketing
The 18 ps of inbound marketingPaul Cash
 
Standing out 2019 clickable pdf
Standing out 2019   clickable pdfStanding out 2019   clickable pdf
Standing out 2019 clickable pdfMot Juste
 

La actualidad más candente (18)

Reasons and Emotions that Guide Stakeholder´s Decisions and Have an Impact on...
Reasons and Emotions that Guide Stakeholder´s Decisions and Have an Impact on...Reasons and Emotions that Guide Stakeholder´s Decisions and Have an Impact on...
Reasons and Emotions that Guide Stakeholder´s Decisions and Have an Impact on...
 
Assessment 1
Assessment 1Assessment 1
Assessment 1
 
kotler_2010_brasil
kotler_2010_brasilkotler_2010_brasil
kotler_2010_brasil
 
Business to Society Marketing - Kotler's Marketing 3.0
Business to Society Marketing - Kotler's Marketing 3.0Business to Society Marketing - Kotler's Marketing 3.0
Business to Society Marketing - Kotler's Marketing 3.0
 
Summary Connective Branding
Summary Connective BrandingSummary Connective Branding
Summary Connective Branding
 
Marketing 3.0 presentation
Marketing 3.0 presentationMarketing 3.0 presentation
Marketing 3.0 presentation
 
Marketing 3.0
Marketing 3.0Marketing 3.0
Marketing 3.0
 
Corporate communication
Corporate communicationCorporate communication
Corporate communication
 
How brand ideal helps to achieve high growth rate and financial success
How brand ideal helps to achieve high growth rate and financial successHow brand ideal helps to achieve high growth rate and financial success
How brand ideal helps to achieve high growth rate and financial success
 
The Evolution of Corporate Communications
The Evolution of Corporate CommunicationsThe Evolution of Corporate Communications
The Evolution of Corporate Communications
 
Upstarts!
Upstarts!Upstarts!
Upstarts!
 
Marketing 3.0 summary 2
Marketing 3.0 summary 2Marketing 3.0 summary 2
Marketing 3.0 summary 2
 
Londre marketingconsulting nineps
Londre marketingconsulting ninepsLondre marketingconsulting nineps
Londre marketingconsulting nineps
 
The 18 ps of inbound marketing
The 18 ps of inbound marketingThe 18 ps of inbound marketing
The 18 ps of inbound marketing
 
Standing out 2019 clickable pdf
Standing out 2019   clickable pdfStanding out 2019   clickable pdf
Standing out 2019 clickable pdf
 
Creative Index 2012
Creative Index 2012Creative Index 2012
Creative Index 2012
 
Question 1
Question 1Question 1
Question 1
 
B2b branding
B2b brandingB2b branding
B2b branding
 

Destacado

Facechange - in a world that is changing
Facechange - in a world that is changingFacechange - in a world that is changing
Facechange - in a world that is changingMinter Dial
 
Outils des Medias Sociaux par The Myndset Digital Marketing
Outils des Medias Sociaux par The Myndset Digital MarketingOutils des Medias Sociaux par The Myndset Digital Marketing
Outils des Medias Sociaux par The Myndset Digital MarketingMinter Dial
 
Marketing in 2012 (Media Aces Feb 2011)
Marketing in 2012 (Media Aces Feb 2011)Marketing in 2012 (Media Aces Feb 2011)
Marketing in 2012 (Media Aces Feb 2011)Minter Dial
 
Coacher les marques ? Par Tiffany Assouline et Minter Dial
Coacher les marques ? Par Tiffany Assouline et Minter DialCoacher les marques ? Par Tiffany Assouline et Minter Dial
Coacher les marques ? Par Tiffany Assouline et Minter DialMinter Dial
 

Destacado (8)

Q1 2009 Earning Report of Itt Industries Inc.
Q1 2009 Earning Report of Itt Industries Inc. Q1 2009 Earning Report of Itt Industries Inc.
Q1 2009 Earning Report of Itt Industries Inc.
 
Facechange - in a world that is changing
Facechange - in a world that is changingFacechange - in a world that is changing
Facechange - in a world that is changing
 
Q2 2009 Earning Report of Csx Corp.
Q2 2009 Earning Report of Csx Corp.Q2 2009 Earning Report of Csx Corp.
Q2 2009 Earning Report of Csx Corp.
 
Outils des Medias Sociaux par The Myndset Digital Marketing
Outils des Medias Sociaux par The Myndset Digital MarketingOutils des Medias Sociaux par The Myndset Digital Marketing
Outils des Medias Sociaux par The Myndset Digital Marketing
 
Q1 2009 Earning Report of Fiserv Inc.
Q1 2009 Earning Report of Fiserv Inc.Q1 2009 Earning Report of Fiserv Inc.
Q1 2009 Earning Report of Fiserv Inc.
 
Q3 2009 Earning Report of Apple Inc.
Q3 2009 Earning Report of Apple Inc.Q3 2009 Earning Report of Apple Inc.
Q3 2009 Earning Report of Apple Inc.
 
Marketing in 2012 (Media Aces Feb 2011)
Marketing in 2012 (Media Aces Feb 2011)Marketing in 2012 (Media Aces Feb 2011)
Marketing in 2012 (Media Aces Feb 2011)
 
Coacher les marques ? Par Tiffany Assouline et Minter Dial
Coacher les marques ? Par Tiffany Assouline et Minter DialCoacher les marques ? Par Tiffany Assouline et Minter Dial
Coacher les marques ? Par Tiffany Assouline et Minter Dial
 

Similar a The Brand University - How to make a sustainable, successful brand

Marketing Business Communication
Marketing Business CommunicationMarketing Business Communication
Marketing Business CommunicationJennifer Campbell
 
Advertising and Promotion.pdf
Advertising and Promotion.pdfAdvertising and Promotion.pdf
Advertising and Promotion.pdfArlene Smith
 
Beyond Advertising: Creating Value Through all Email and Mobile Touchpoints
Beyond Advertising: Creating Value Through all Email and Mobile TouchpointsBeyond Advertising: Creating Value Through all Email and Mobile Touchpoints
Beyond Advertising: Creating Value Through all Email and Mobile TouchpointsMarketingSherpa
 
Characterization of a marketing organization
Characterization of a marketing organizationCharacterization of a marketing organization
Characterization of a marketing organizationMuhammad Umais Khan
 
Media and Communications - White Paper
Media and Communications - White PaperMedia and Communications - White Paper
Media and Communications - White PaperPratik Kumar Singh
 
Marketing For Talent: The New Frontier, SMPS, Marketer, August 2014
Marketing For Talent: The New Frontier, SMPS, Marketer, August 2014Marketing For Talent: The New Frontier, SMPS, Marketer, August 2014
Marketing For Talent: The New Frontier, SMPS, Marketer, August 2014Maribel Castillo
 
Why the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social Media
Why the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social MediaWhy the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social Media
Why the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social Mediajcsmyers
 
THE BRAND LODGE WORKSHOP 2016
THE BRAND LODGE WORKSHOP 2016THE BRAND LODGE WORKSHOP 2016
THE BRAND LODGE WORKSHOP 2016Geoff Glendenning
 
W2O Group Function Optimization 2014 report
W2O Group Function Optimization 2014 reportW2O Group Function Optimization 2014 report
W2O Group Function Optimization 2014 reportW2O Group
 
Marketing Plan For The Local Grocery Store Essay
Marketing Plan For The Local Grocery Store EssayMarketing Plan For The Local Grocery Store Essay
Marketing Plan For The Local Grocery Store EssayGina Alfaro
 
Measuring Personal Branding for personal and corporate success
Measuring Personal Branding for personal and corporate successMeasuring Personal Branding for personal and corporate success
Measuring Personal Branding for personal and corporate successProf. Jonathan A. J. Wilson PhD
 
Leadership in the 21st century
Leadership in the 21st centuryLeadership in the 21st century
Leadership in the 21st centurynakarin42
 
Ending war between_sales_marketing
Ending war between_sales_marketingEnding war between_sales_marketing
Ending war between_sales_marketingAshraf Diab
 

Similar a The Brand University - How to make a sustainable, successful brand (20)

Marketing Business Communication
Marketing Business CommunicationMarketing Business Communication
Marketing Business Communication
 
Co-creations builds stronger bonds between brands and stakeholders by talking...
Co-creations builds stronger bonds between brands and stakeholders by talking...Co-creations builds stronger bonds between brands and stakeholders by talking...
Co-creations builds stronger bonds between brands and stakeholders by talking...
 
Advertising and Promotion.pdf
Advertising and Promotion.pdfAdvertising and Promotion.pdf
Advertising and Promotion.pdf
 
A new corporate communication: influence, character and purpuse
A new corporate communication: influence, character and purpuseA new corporate communication: influence, character and purpuse
A new corporate communication: influence, character and purpuse
 
Beyond Advertising: Creating Value Through all Email and Mobile Touchpoints
Beyond Advertising: Creating Value Through all Email and Mobile TouchpointsBeyond Advertising: Creating Value Through all Email and Mobile Touchpoints
Beyond Advertising: Creating Value Through all Email and Mobile Touchpoints
 
Characterization of a marketing organization
Characterization of a marketing organizationCharacterization of a marketing organization
Characterization of a marketing organization
 
Media and Communications - White Paper
Media and Communications - White PaperMedia and Communications - White Paper
Media and Communications - White Paper
 
Research Whitepaper
Research WhitepaperResearch Whitepaper
Research Whitepaper
 
7 Bridges
7 Bridges7 Bridges
7 Bridges
 
Marketing For Talent: The New Frontier, SMPS, Marketer, August 2014
Marketing For Talent: The New Frontier, SMPS, Marketer, August 2014Marketing For Talent: The New Frontier, SMPS, Marketer, August 2014
Marketing For Talent: The New Frontier, SMPS, Marketer, August 2014
 
Why the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social Media
Why the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social MediaWhy the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social Media
Why the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social Media
 
Building A Modern Brand
Building A Modern BrandBuilding A Modern Brand
Building A Modern Brand
 
THE BRAND LODGE WORKSHOP 2016
THE BRAND LODGE WORKSHOP 2016THE BRAND LODGE WORKSHOP 2016
THE BRAND LODGE WORKSHOP 2016
 
W2O Group Function Optimization 2014 report
W2O Group Function Optimization 2014 reportW2O Group Function Optimization 2014 report
W2O Group Function Optimization 2014 report
 
Marketing Plan For The Local Grocery Store Essay
Marketing Plan For The Local Grocery Store EssayMarketing Plan For The Local Grocery Store Essay
Marketing Plan For The Local Grocery Store Essay
 
Measuring Personal Branding for personal and corporate success
Measuring Personal Branding for personal and corporate successMeasuring Personal Branding for personal and corporate success
Measuring Personal Branding for personal and corporate success
 
Leadership in the 21st century
Leadership in the 21st centuryLeadership in the 21st century
Leadership in the 21st century
 
Corporate Communication
Corporate CommunicationCorporate Communication
Corporate Communication
 
Ending war between_sales_marketing
Ending war between_sales_marketingEnding war between_sales_marketing
Ending war between_sales_marketing
 
Brand activation
Brand activationBrand activation
Brand activation
 

Más de Minter Dial

State of Empathy Presentation 2020
State of Empathy Presentation 2020State of Empathy Presentation 2020
State of Empathy Presentation 2020Minter Dial
 
Luxury brands and social relationships
Luxury brands and social relationshipsLuxury brands and social relationships
Luxury brands and social relationshipsMinter Dial
 
Leadership Survey 2020
Leadership Survey 2020Leadership Survey 2020
Leadership Survey 2020Minter Dial
 
Estado de la Empatía 2020
Estado de la Empatía 2020Estado de la Empatía 2020
Estado de la Empatía 2020Minter Dial
 
The Last Ring Home carriage on PBS in 2019
The Last Ring Home carriage on PBS in 2019The Last Ring Home carriage on PBS in 2019
The Last Ring Home carriage on PBS in 2019Minter Dial
 
Sxsw 2019 - Putting Empathy into Business and AI
Sxsw 2019 - Putting Empathy into Business and AISxsw 2019 - Putting Empathy into Business and AI
Sxsw 2019 - Putting Empathy into Business and AIMinter Dial
 
Disrupting Leadership - The Strategic Challenges of Media Leadership
Disrupting Leadership - The Strategic Challenges of Media LeadershipDisrupting Leadership - The Strategic Challenges of Media Leadership
Disrupting Leadership - The Strategic Challenges of Media LeadershipMinter Dial
 
LikeMinds Festival Exeter 2018 Workshop on Digital Transformation
LikeMinds Festival Exeter 2018 Workshop on Digital TransformationLikeMinds Festival Exeter 2018 Workshop on Digital Transformation
LikeMinds Festival Exeter 2018 Workshop on Digital TransformationMinter Dial
 
Disruption Summit 2018 - Three keys to futureproof your business
Disruption Summit 2018 - Three keys to futureproof your businessDisruption Summit 2018 - Three keys to futureproof your business
Disruption Summit 2018 - Three keys to futureproof your businessMinter Dial
 
Futureproof Your Business For The Next Disruption #SXSW2018
Futureproof Your Business For The Next Disruption #SXSW2018Futureproof Your Business For The Next Disruption #SXSW2018
Futureproof Your Business For The Next Disruption #SXSW2018Minter Dial
 
New tech trends 2016 - How new tech is impacting society around the world
New tech trends 2016 - How new tech is impacting society around the worldNew tech trends 2016 - How new tech is impacting society around the world
New tech trends 2016 - How new tech is impacting society around the worldMinter Dial
 
Netexplo 2016 - Is London the digital capital of Europe?
Netexplo 2016 - Is London the digital capital of Europe?Netexplo 2016 - Is London the digital capital of Europe?
Netexplo 2016 - Is London the digital capital of Europe?Minter Dial
 
Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington cemetery - Jeopardy Question
Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington cemetery - Jeopardy QuestionTomb of the Unknowns at Arlington cemetery - Jeopardy Question
Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington cemetery - Jeopardy QuestionMinter Dial
 
How to be a rock star CMO? Adding rocks to the roll [sic] of the CMO
How to be a rock star CMO? Adding rocks to the roll [sic] of the CMOHow to be a rock star CMO? Adding rocks to the roll [sic] of the CMO
How to be a rock star CMO? Adding rocks to the roll [sic] of the CMOMinter Dial
 
New tech trends worldwide 2015 from the Netexplo Observatory
New tech trends worldwide 2015 from the Netexplo ObservatoryNew tech trends worldwide 2015 from the Netexplo Observatory
New tech trends worldwide 2015 from the Netexplo ObservatoryMinter Dial
 
New tech trends - How new tech is impacting society around the world
New tech trends - How new tech is impacting society around the world New tech trends - How new tech is impacting society around the world
New tech trends - How new tech is impacting society around the world Minter Dial
 
Netexplo 2014 - New tech trends and analysis from worldwide panel of experts
Netexplo 2014 - New tech trends and analysis from worldwide panel of experts Netexplo 2014 - New tech trends and analysis from worldwide panel of experts
Netexplo 2014 - New tech trends and analysis from worldwide panel of experts Minter Dial
 
Future marketing trends 2014-2015 - and where are the big challenges for brands?
Future marketing trends 2014-2015 - and where are the big challenges for brands?Future marketing trends 2014-2015 - and where are the big challenges for brands?
Future marketing trends 2014-2015 - and where are the big challenges for brands?Minter Dial
 
Tendances Marketing pour 2014 (LabCom)
Tendances Marketing pour 2014 (LabCom) Tendances Marketing pour 2014 (LabCom)
Tendances Marketing pour 2014 (LabCom) Minter Dial
 
Social Retail - The use of social media in retail (LikeMinds Event Nov 2013)
Social Retail - The use of social media in retail (LikeMinds Event Nov 2013) Social Retail - The use of social media in retail (LikeMinds Event Nov 2013)
Social Retail - The use of social media in retail (LikeMinds Event Nov 2013) Minter Dial
 

Más de Minter Dial (20)

State of Empathy Presentation 2020
State of Empathy Presentation 2020State of Empathy Presentation 2020
State of Empathy Presentation 2020
 
Luxury brands and social relationships
Luxury brands and social relationshipsLuxury brands and social relationships
Luxury brands and social relationships
 
Leadership Survey 2020
Leadership Survey 2020Leadership Survey 2020
Leadership Survey 2020
 
Estado de la Empatía 2020
Estado de la Empatía 2020Estado de la Empatía 2020
Estado de la Empatía 2020
 
The Last Ring Home carriage on PBS in 2019
The Last Ring Home carriage on PBS in 2019The Last Ring Home carriage on PBS in 2019
The Last Ring Home carriage on PBS in 2019
 
Sxsw 2019 - Putting Empathy into Business and AI
Sxsw 2019 - Putting Empathy into Business and AISxsw 2019 - Putting Empathy into Business and AI
Sxsw 2019 - Putting Empathy into Business and AI
 
Disrupting Leadership - The Strategic Challenges of Media Leadership
Disrupting Leadership - The Strategic Challenges of Media LeadershipDisrupting Leadership - The Strategic Challenges of Media Leadership
Disrupting Leadership - The Strategic Challenges of Media Leadership
 
LikeMinds Festival Exeter 2018 Workshop on Digital Transformation
LikeMinds Festival Exeter 2018 Workshop on Digital TransformationLikeMinds Festival Exeter 2018 Workshop on Digital Transformation
LikeMinds Festival Exeter 2018 Workshop on Digital Transformation
 
Disruption Summit 2018 - Three keys to futureproof your business
Disruption Summit 2018 - Three keys to futureproof your businessDisruption Summit 2018 - Three keys to futureproof your business
Disruption Summit 2018 - Three keys to futureproof your business
 
Futureproof Your Business For The Next Disruption #SXSW2018
Futureproof Your Business For The Next Disruption #SXSW2018Futureproof Your Business For The Next Disruption #SXSW2018
Futureproof Your Business For The Next Disruption #SXSW2018
 
New tech trends 2016 - How new tech is impacting society around the world
New tech trends 2016 - How new tech is impacting society around the worldNew tech trends 2016 - How new tech is impacting society around the world
New tech trends 2016 - How new tech is impacting society around the world
 
Netexplo 2016 - Is London the digital capital of Europe?
Netexplo 2016 - Is London the digital capital of Europe?Netexplo 2016 - Is London the digital capital of Europe?
Netexplo 2016 - Is London the digital capital of Europe?
 
Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington cemetery - Jeopardy Question
Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington cemetery - Jeopardy QuestionTomb of the Unknowns at Arlington cemetery - Jeopardy Question
Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington cemetery - Jeopardy Question
 
How to be a rock star CMO? Adding rocks to the roll [sic] of the CMO
How to be a rock star CMO? Adding rocks to the roll [sic] of the CMOHow to be a rock star CMO? Adding rocks to the roll [sic] of the CMO
How to be a rock star CMO? Adding rocks to the roll [sic] of the CMO
 
New tech trends worldwide 2015 from the Netexplo Observatory
New tech trends worldwide 2015 from the Netexplo ObservatoryNew tech trends worldwide 2015 from the Netexplo Observatory
New tech trends worldwide 2015 from the Netexplo Observatory
 
New tech trends - How new tech is impacting society around the world
New tech trends - How new tech is impacting society around the world New tech trends - How new tech is impacting society around the world
New tech trends - How new tech is impacting society around the world
 
Netexplo 2014 - New tech trends and analysis from worldwide panel of experts
Netexplo 2014 - New tech trends and analysis from worldwide panel of experts Netexplo 2014 - New tech trends and analysis from worldwide panel of experts
Netexplo 2014 - New tech trends and analysis from worldwide panel of experts
 
Future marketing trends 2014-2015 - and where are the big challenges for brands?
Future marketing trends 2014-2015 - and where are the big challenges for brands?Future marketing trends 2014-2015 - and where are the big challenges for brands?
Future marketing trends 2014-2015 - and where are the big challenges for brands?
 
Tendances Marketing pour 2014 (LabCom)
Tendances Marketing pour 2014 (LabCom) Tendances Marketing pour 2014 (LabCom)
Tendances Marketing pour 2014 (LabCom)
 
Social Retail - The use of social media in retail (LikeMinds Event Nov 2013)
Social Retail - The use of social media in retail (LikeMinds Event Nov 2013) Social Retail - The use of social media in retail (LikeMinds Event Nov 2013)
Social Retail - The use of social media in retail (LikeMinds Event Nov 2013)
 

Último

Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptxContemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptxMarkAnthonyAurellano
 
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdfNewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdfKhaled Al Awadi
 
Organizational Structure Running A Successful Business
Organizational Structure Running A Successful BusinessOrganizational Structure Running A Successful Business
Organizational Structure Running A Successful BusinessSeta Wicaksana
 
Case study on tata clothing brand zudio in detail
Case study on tata clothing brand zudio in detailCase study on tata clothing brand zudio in detail
Case study on tata clothing brand zudio in detailAriel592675
 
Annual General Meeting Presentation Slides
Annual General Meeting Presentation SlidesAnnual General Meeting Presentation Slides
Annual General Meeting Presentation SlidesKeppelCorporation
 
Ms Motilal Padampat Sugar Mills vs. State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. - A Milesto...
Ms Motilal Padampat Sugar Mills vs. State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. - A Milesto...Ms Motilal Padampat Sugar Mills vs. State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. - A Milesto...
Ms Motilal Padampat Sugar Mills vs. State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. - A Milesto...ShrutiBose4
 
Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncr
Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / NcrCall Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncr
Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncrdollysharma2066
 
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchir
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent ChirchirMarketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchir
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchirictsugar
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCRashishs7044
 
Global Scenario On Sustainable and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...
Global Scenario On Sustainable  and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...Global Scenario On Sustainable  and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...
Global Scenario On Sustainable and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...ictsugar
 
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfAPRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfRbc Rbcua
 
Memorándum de Entendimiento (MoU) entre Codelco y SQM
Memorándum de Entendimiento (MoU) entre Codelco y SQMMemorándum de Entendimiento (MoU) entre Codelco y SQM
Memorándum de Entendimiento (MoU) entre Codelco y SQMVoces Mineras
 
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample ReportIndia Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample ReportMintel Group
 
PSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement PresentationPSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement PresentationAnamaria Contreras
 
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City GurgaonCall Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaoncallgirls2057
 
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckPitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckHajeJanKamps
 
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdfDigital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdfJos Voskuil
 
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...ssuserf63bd7
 

Último (20)

Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptxContemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
Contemporary Economic Issues Facing the Filipino Entrepreneur (1).pptx
 
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdfNewBase  19 April  2024  Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
NewBase 19 April 2024 Energy News issue - 1717 by Khaled Al Awadi.pdf
 
Enjoy ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida Escorts Delhi NCR
Enjoy ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida Escorts Delhi NCREnjoy ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida Escorts Delhi NCR
Enjoy ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Sector 18 Noida Escorts Delhi NCR
 
Organizational Structure Running A Successful Business
Organizational Structure Running A Successful BusinessOrganizational Structure Running A Successful Business
Organizational Structure Running A Successful Business
 
Case study on tata clothing brand zudio in detail
Case study on tata clothing brand zudio in detailCase study on tata clothing brand zudio in detail
Case study on tata clothing brand zudio in detail
 
Annual General Meeting Presentation Slides
Annual General Meeting Presentation SlidesAnnual General Meeting Presentation Slides
Annual General Meeting Presentation Slides
 
Ms Motilal Padampat Sugar Mills vs. State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. - A Milesto...
Ms Motilal Padampat Sugar Mills vs. State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. - A Milesto...Ms Motilal Padampat Sugar Mills vs. State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. - A Milesto...
Ms Motilal Padampat Sugar Mills vs. State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors. - A Milesto...
 
Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncr
Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / NcrCall Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncr
Call Girls in DELHI Cantt, ( Call Me )-8377877756-Female Escort- In Delhi / Ncr
 
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchir
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent ChirchirMarketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchir
Marketplace and Quality Assurance Presentation - Vincent Chirchir
 
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR
8447779800, Low rate Call girls in Tughlakabad Delhi NCR
 
Global Scenario On Sustainable and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...
Global Scenario On Sustainable  and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...Global Scenario On Sustainable  and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...
Global Scenario On Sustainable and Resilient Coconut Industry by Dr. Jelfina...
 
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdfAPRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
APRIL2024_UKRAINE_xml_0000000000000 .pdf
 
No-1 Call Girls In Goa 93193 VIP 73153 Escort service In North Goa Panaji, Ca...
No-1 Call Girls In Goa 93193 VIP 73153 Escort service In North Goa Panaji, Ca...No-1 Call Girls In Goa 93193 VIP 73153 Escort service In North Goa Panaji, Ca...
No-1 Call Girls In Goa 93193 VIP 73153 Escort service In North Goa Panaji, Ca...
 
Memorándum de Entendimiento (MoU) entre Codelco y SQM
Memorándum de Entendimiento (MoU) entre Codelco y SQMMemorándum de Entendimiento (MoU) entre Codelco y SQM
Memorándum de Entendimiento (MoU) entre Codelco y SQM
 
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample ReportIndia Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
India Consumer 2024 Redacted Sample Report
 
PSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement PresentationPSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
PSCC - Capability Statement Presentation
 
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City GurgaonCall Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
Call Us 📲8800102216📞 Call Girls In DLF City Gurgaon
 
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deckPitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
Pitch Deck Teardown: Geodesic.Life's $500k Pre-seed deck
 
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdfDigital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
Digital Transformation in the PLM domain - distrib.pdf
 
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...
International Business Environments and Operations 16th Global Edition test b...
 

The Brand University - How to make a sustainable, successful brand

  • 1. The Brand University™ -- How to make a sustainable, successful brand. Executive Summary: The world of branding has, over a very condensed period of time, undergone a virtual and very real revolution as far as both the consumer and the employee are concerned. The challenge that companies are now facing is how to adapt effectively and efficiently to several convergent paradigm shifts. This white paper reviews some of the major changes and raises questions about the implications for today‘s leaders. This paper‘s position is that, more than ever before, companies need to evolve into Learning 1 Organizations and that instituting a company-wide Brand University™ can offer a compelling way to accompany such a change. Building a successful brand is a more complex task In today‘s marketplace and, certainly, going forward, creating a sustainably successful brand has become a different and more complex task than in, even, the near past. The main factors that have brought about this shift are threefold: (1) the plethora of brands with the onslaught of new product launches; (2) the digital world (internet and mobility) with its ability to diffuse the power of traditional marketing and distribution; and (3) the latent lack of trust between the consumer and the brand, layered in with the lack of trust between employee and employer. The consumer – certainly impacted by the economic pressures -- has pulled back from buying brands blindly. The luxury market, for example, has been distinctly hit, as there has been more scrutiny of the intrinsic value in the upscale prices. As Pam Danziger of Unity Marketing said in their 2009 study on the luxury market, ―[a]ffluent consumers are redefining, reassessing and re-evaluating their lives and their lifestyles. This is happening across the culture, not just among a small segment of the affluent market and it will mean major shifts to how luxury brands can market their goods in the new economy.‖2 The paradigm shifts are on many levels Yet, the phenomenon of questioning the value of brands goes much further. In the current environment, with manifold uncertainties produced by the lingering threat of terrorism, global warming and economic recession, the consumer has been re-evaluating his/her relationship with money and the purchase decision in search of greater meaning. In order to rise above the strictly functional performance of a given product, the brand will need to demonstrate its ―added value‖, whereby the consumer finds significance in -- and identifies with – the brand‘s values. And a large part of the challenge is in being able to communicate that value effectively and fluidly. Brands have to fight through the clutter of crowded, confusing and disparate communication channels to reach an audience that no longer takes as the gospel the marketing messages. Broad and dislocated access to information – especially on price, performance and location – has empowered the consumer. With the so-called ―left brain3‖ messaging driven to its logical extreme, the new world order belongs increasingly to the ―right brain‖ where image, emotion and experience are privileged – if only unconsciously -- by the consumer in their purchase decision. In this context, companies need to evaluate whether their employees are tapping into their more creative and conceptual side. In his book, ―A Whole 4 New Mind, ‖ Dan Pink forcefully speaks to the value of a balanced mind, combining the rational and analytical components with the more imaginative, artistic sides of the brain. And such is the need inside 1 A learning organization is the term given to a company that facilitates the learning of its members and continuously transforms itself. Pedler, M., Burgogyne, J. and Boydell, T. 1997. The Learning Company: A strategy for sustainable development. 2nd Ed. London; McGraw-Hill. 2 Unity Marketing, run by Pamela Danziger, is a boutique market research firm specializing in consumer insights for marketers and retailers http://www.unitymarketingonline.com/cms_luxury/luxury/pr_main/After_Recession_5-27-09.php 3 The idea of left and right sides of the brain is a misnomer as it is far too reductive. For purposes of this paper, we use t he ―left brain‖ term to be associated with rational, analytical thought, while the ―right brain‖ is associated with abstract, creative thought. 4 Daniel Pink, ―A Whole New Mind: Moving from the Information Age to the Conceptual Age,‖ (NY, NY: Penguin, 2005). The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet Page 1
  • 2. the new organization, which could be better described as a living organism, capable of learning, growing and adapting to the new environment and demands of the marketplace. As Peter Senge said, ―[i]n the long run, the only sustainable source of competitive advantage is [the] organization‘s ability to learn faster than its competition.‖5 In search of congruency If product excellence and innovation remain the sine qua non of leading brands, traditional Kotler-like marketing no longer carries the same weight in creating a successful brand. One could even argue that marketing, as we know it, must take a step back to re-allocate resources toward building the business the ―old fashioned way,‖ that is to say via relationship and network building, aided by the burgeoning new technologies. As written by Minter Dial on TheMyndset.com: “The emphasis so often remains on the product, its performance, packaging, pricing and publicity — all part of a hardcore left brain (i.e. super rational) affair, with no room for fun or out of the box thinking. While marketing teams must continue to plot their 4 p’s, the real action is in words (i.e. accompanied by the authentic acts) that begin with an e: engagement, emotion, exchange, experience & essence. These 5 e’s come on top of the 4 p’s, not in replacement thereof.” If social media has become so powerful, it is because it is ―social‖ before it is media. The new business environment puts a greater emphasis on the quality of the relationship and other intangibles such as humor, education and the element of surprise. A successful brand, therefore, needs to create what Carl 6 Rogers described as congruency as part of a larger value system. In a company setting, this value system requires time to develop and transmit and, by extension, requires a tremendous effort of 5 Peter M. Senge, ―The Fifth Discipline, The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization.‖ (NY, NY: Doubleday, 2000). The quotation was paraphrased by Senge from a statement made by Arie de Geus, Head of Planning of Royal Dutch/Shell, p8. 6 As described by Carl Rogers (in On Becoming a Person: A Therapist's View of Psychotherapy. London: Constable, 1961), congruency for the individual can be applied to the brand, whereby a fully congruent brand realizes its potential without compromising a positive experience. The brand – and the individuals within – can remain authentic and genuine in pursuit of the brand‘s objectives. The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet Page 2
  • 3. coherency. Consequently, brands need to revisit their strategies and, importantly, need to rethink how to create an appropriate company-wide culture, with the adapted processes and tools. The employer brand At the centre of the equation is the human being, the employee, breathing life into the product experience every living day (and not just the working days). Brands interact with the customer in many inanimate one-way and interruptive manners, through advertising, packaging and merchandising. Such mechanisms will undoubtedly remain in place, albeit evolving with the new technologies. However, the strength of a brand – and its ability to retain a sustainable loyalty – will lie in the development of a dynamic and evolutionary relationship. Brands that will succeed in the future, therefore, will need to strengthen the emotional link – and this link passes most credibly via personal relationship building, networking and interaction. The key actor then becomes the employee. As Tony Hsieh, CEO of Zappos.com, has said, ―every employee is the brand‖. And the main challenge in this context is being able to attract, select, train and empower the employee population to own, transport and transpose those values onto the end consumer experience. The old moniker of ―keeping it simple, stupid‖ remains pertinent, but not sufficient. The new world is radically more complex with evermore disperse, confused and crowded communication channels. A brand has to unify all its forces in the same direction in order to compete in this cluttered world. The strongest and most vibrant brands will be those that are meaningful and consistent, all the while being innovative. And there is no better vehicle to pass this message than via the employee. Some brands that have been doing an excellent job at this include Patagonia or Starbucks, while other high profile brands have actually taken to advertising their employees as their ―product‖ (e.g. General Electric, IBM, Intel and, recently, Toyota). Whether that employee is the salesperson, beauty advisor at the department store stand, an educator for hairdressers, a customer service representative, telephone operator, or any junior employee in head office in an online chat room, the challenge is in spreading the values and galvanizing the entire organization behind the same tone of message. Breaking down the silos For the vast majority of companies, the notion of brand building is rudimentary and limited to the development of product (or services) and filling of orders. Even when an enterprise is aware of the need to move from selling a product/service to creating an unforgettable experience. there are many hindrances to implementing a full brand experience. The ambition is oftentimes curtailed because of budgetary restraints, a lack of know-how or internal politics where departments operate too much in silos. And the challenge is not a simple one to overcome. At its core, the corporate culture may need to be re- conditioned to break down those silos and to allocate the time and resources necessary around the common uniting force: the client. And, in due recognition of the limited nature of resources, this will frequently entail what not to do as much as what is necessary to do. In this new environment, companies need to evolve their corporate ethos and culture toward a style of management which favours collaboration intra- and, even, inter-company, to find ways to foster intra- departmental sharing of values and information, to harness the expertise and history resident in the individuals of the company via the new technologies. With the trend toward distributed workforces and the burgeoning wave of web-enabled technologies, there are opportunities – particularly for the larger multinational companies – to create blended (i.e. off- and online) networking and, equally important, blended learning environments. This suggests a host of new managerial skills and processes such as:  A review of the brand‘s strategy and an alignment of the brand‘s strategy with its deeper mission (assuming such has been appropriately defined).  The ability to define a corporate identity and culture, to clarify and share its values throughout the organization and to live fully by those values, i.e. to hire and fire according to these values. The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet Page 3
  • 4.  The need for new measurement tools for the organization which recognize a truly collaborative 7 (―web 2.0‖ ) spirit.  A re-definition of the role of the manager as a coach or a facilitator (for example, of networks) This raises 3 important questions:  How to share the new brand identity – the vision – in order to get people to question outdated beliefs about what the company "is", and, ultimately, to change behaviours?  How to create a [worldwide] network of trainers and/or consultants able to deliver the content and tools necessary to accompany such a transition?  How to provide a sustainable, cost-effective presence in the countries to maintain the connection to and vibrancy of the brand‘s values? It is our conviction that one of the key methods of building a successful brand, that will have a sustainable future, is by creating a University for the Brand, an internally oriented organization which helps define those values within the enterprise. More importantly, this Brand University™ communicates those values via its partners and throughout the multiple channels and touchpoints toward the end consumer. The Brand University™ would be, by our definition, a centre of creativity, innovation and collective intelligence. However, we believe the notion needs to go much further toward building a spirit, an identity and a community united around the brand. We believe that such a university must have three central principles to help create a sustainably powerful brand. 3 principles of the Brand University The first principle of the Brand University™ is that the company is genuinely dedicated to being client centric. Much lip service is paid to being client focused; however, many companies trip up under the sales pressure, overblown egos as well as a lack of means. To put the customer truly at the centre, a company needs to have the customer‘s interests at heart. In order even to have access to those interests, the brand necessarily must gain the trust of that customer. As coined by Alex Mangossian 8, brands need to be less concerned with building their [internal] database and more concerned with building their fan base, through a relationship founded on trust. With that trust comes the opportunities to learn together, to collaborate and share invaluable data. Given the ability for consumers to circumvent or even to twist standard corporate communications, brands must learn to get involved with the customer in ways that are credible and, in short, more human. Customer Relationship Management (CRM) must be converted from a mechanical one-way conversation into social relationship building. The second principle of the Brand University™ is that the strength of the brand resides in the human element. Employees up and down the age scale are increasingly seeking—above just straight compensation—greater meaning from their place of employment. It is well known that employee satisfaction can come from learning, providing instruction for purposes increased effectiveness and a degree of motivation. However, greater fulfilment can come from working in an ongoing learning environment. Well beyond one-time, off-site trainings, a learning environment implies more a shared state of mind. And, the coincidence is that companies need also to convert themselves into learning organizations in order better to capture the history and knowledge that resides in its human bank. A Learning Organisation is one in which the internal team is committed to a constructive and systemic approach of sharing and learning in the pursuit of a positive economic result. Importantly, the entire organisation must be involved and, fundamentally, the ‗corporate‘ strategy, if not culture, must involve and encourage experimentation, learning and the ―right to err‖. As said by Pedler et al, ―[t]he Learning Company is a vision of what might be possible. It is not brought about simply by training individuals; it can 7 The term "Web 2.0" is commonly associated with web applications that facilitate interactive information sharing, interoperability, user-centered design, and collaboration (such as user-generated content) on the World Wide Web. 8 Alex Mangossian, CEO of Heritage House Publishing, Inc. Author of www.alexmangossian.com and at www.MarketingOnlineLive.com. Taken from the Podcast "Smartest thing you can do in 2010". The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet Page 4
  • 5. only happen as a result of learning at the whole organization level. A Learning Company is an 9 organization that facilitates the learning of all its members and continuously transforms itself.‖ The third principle, in line with the generally accepted definition of the Learning Organisation, is that the Brand University™ must become a project-wide undertaking, not limited to the sales force or the other branches directly in touch with the end customer. Not only does the CEO need to be the brand‘s biggest and best spokesperson, all departments need to be aligned behind the same values and messages. We believe that the Brand University™ concept, that seeks to propagate the brand‘s values and systems throughout the brand and all the subsidiaries, starting with the sales branch, is the most comprehensive and organic process, adapted to the modern challenge of multinational brands. The undertaking of a true Brand University™ for a major brand is as yet unprecedented on an international stage. While there are many corporate universities in existence, they tend to focus on competence acquisition or sales training. The Brand University, as the basis of a vibrant learning organization, remains untested in the field in its fullest measure. And for companies with a portfolio of brands to manage, the further challenge is creating an all-encompassing company-wide sales university without compromising or effacing the differences resident in each of the brands. How does such a university become reality? The very first step is critical: to establish that the company is ready and willing to evolve, with buy-in from top management. As is so often the case, top management must lead by example. Moreover, the allocation of resources is systematically a top-down decision belonging to the C-suite. In order to avoid creating an empty concept, the starting point has to be operational, and close to one of the organization's nerve centres. This will allow the creation of a community of practice10. The idea here is not a Corporate University, more often devoted to the development or the recognition of some Happy Few, but a real Brand University. This, by bringing together the various communities of practice, creates relationships, bonding the different stakeholders while embracing Brand values and thus creating a sense and pride of belonging. When it comes down to it, staff members are the first to create a positive energy around their Brand. And they are the first to share, contagiously, their enthusiasm, their confidence, and their pride in the products or services promoted by their Brand. The Brand University™ is a real or virtual space in which staff can share codes, symbols, habits, behaviour, and language, and gain from cultural, generational, or even hierarchical diversity. It is a forum for the shared ideas, values, and especially the vision which are the bases of any "human company". A Brand University™ will thrive if the initial impulse is accompanied by the boundless capacity to encourage innovation, the sole guarantor of future value. Today, more than ever, innovation cannot come solely from R&D locked away in a laboratory, or from brand management pirouetting in its headquarters, but must instead be encouraged, sought after, supported, and recognised within all levels of an organisation. To return to the metaphor of a living organism, the survival of the organisation depends on a developmental intelligence and having adaptation skills built into every living cell. From this perspective, the initial ―community of practice‖, as the starting point of the Brand University, allows us to come back to the fundamental professions associated with the common goal of production, whatever the industry. Organisations operate with increasingly complex structures. Multi-national companies create matrix hierarchies, cross-departmental projects, indispensable yet potentially stultifying rules, and seek economies of scale that can kill off good ideas before they get off the ground. In this world of ever more complex organisations, a return to the basics and the lowest common professional denominator is the best way to put the horse back before the cart and give a new impulse and energy to 9 M. Pedler, J. Burgoyne & T. Boydell, The Learning Company. A Strategy for Sustainable Development, Mc Graw-Hill, 1997 10 A ―community of practice‖ is a group of people who share an interest, concern or passion and who interact together in an effort to build a collective intelligence and learn how to do their activity better. The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet Page 5
  • 6. move forward. At the granular level, individuals are faced with the fragmentation of tasks and the emergence of often-misunderstood virtual tools (whose adoption is resisted). Combined with a fear of change, individuals experience isolation, stress, discouragement and disorientation. In this context, regaining confidence in "knowing what you know, doing what you do" and sharing it with others across professional and language barriers, are a source of enrichment and empowerment. Such empowerment gives back to employees the feeling of working together, pride in belonging, and peer recognition, all of which help lead to a renewed hope that difficulties can be overcome by individual initiative and collective mobilisation as well as a commitment to the values which bring them together: The Brand. The Brand University™ should be a space in which everyone, whatever their position in the company, not only accepts change, but become actors who create change. They can experiment with new perspectives, open themselves up to new ideas, cut through traditional hierarchies or divisions to create new relationships, and act and talk differently in order to try out new ideas on a neutral terrain. The goal of the Brand University™ is to capitalise on shared knowledge and passion to find ideas that will, in the future, contribute to the organisation of the company, and especially to test how these discoveries can be implemented and integrated to become the new Business as Usual. Authors: Minter Dial, President The Myndset Company & Eric Mellet, Sales and Development Training Director The Brand University™ – Dial, Mellet Page 6